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11551 Bridgeton Evening News (Bridgeton, NJ): August 16, 1922, pg 6.

Alfred J. Masecar and Augusta F., his wife to Frank W. Harding, Commercial, five lots of land in Millville, about $7000. 
Massecar/Masecar, Alfred Joel (I705)
 
11552 Brief History of Edmund Riley Shaw
Contributed By Kathlyno · 12 June 2013

"Edmund Riley Shaw, son of Elijah Shaw, Sr., and Martha Ann Thomas, was born in Centerville, Davis, Utah, June 22, 1855. He came to North Ogden with his parents in his youth, and was baptized by Thomas B. Brown. He was ordained an Elder November 20, 1871; ordained a Seventy December 9, 1883 by William W. Taylor.

His first wife Elizabeth Rose, daughter of Wesley Rose and Mariah Gates, bore him two children. Sarah Elizabeth Shaw was born April 7, 1873. On July 10, 1881 she was baptized by Jacob Ferrin and confirmed by E. M. Wade. She became the wife of Chauncey W. Rhees of Pleasant View and located in that ward. Eva Shaw was born June 8, 1875. She married George Franklin Barker. Elizabeth Rose died on November 28, 1876 at North Ogden, Utah.

Edmund Riley Shaw afterwards married Sarah Jane Ward by whom he had nine children born in North Ogden and Pleasant View being transferred to the latter ward May 16,1886, from where he filled a mission to the Southern States."

("North Ogden Ward History," compiled by Benjamin F. Blaylock, 1905, pp. 33,72) 
Shaw, Edmund Riley (I96)
 
11553 Brief History of William Heber Gurr



Born: 12 October 1856 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Parents: William Gurr and Sarah Elizabeth Barker
Married: Anna Hansen, 10 April 1877 at Cedar City, Iron County, Utah
Died: 1 August 1933, Parowan, Iron County, Utah



WILLIAM HEBER GURR -- A LIFE SKETCH
William Heber Gurr was born to English emigrants to Australia 12 October 1856. He was the second of nine children born to William Gurr and Sarah Elizabeth Barker. His parents joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Sydney, and determined to emigrate again, this time to the United States. They sailed to San Pedro aboard the Lucas, departing 27 June 1857, and arriving at San Pedro after a problematic voyage on 12 October 1857. They joined the Saints at San Bernardino, for a couple of months, and then were "recalled" to Utah because of the "Utah War."

They stopped in Parowan, Utah. Here, William Heber grew to adulthood, and met Anna Hansen, born to Danish parents in Cedar City. In October, 1879, they were among those called to settle in San Juan County.

When their first child, William, was two-years-old, they traveled through the “Hole-in- the-Rock” to help colonize Bluff, San Juan County, Utah. The party chiseled their way over slick rock hills and valleys.

The trip took about six months and was filled with terrible hardships. The cattle had to be guarded each night and day as there was always the threat of Indians around who would stalk the camp in order to steal them. Once, after they arrived at Bluff, the Indians drove off a few head of cattle belonging to the colony at Bluff. William stripped off his clothes, swam across the San Juan River, and drove the cattle back. Because he was naked and so white, the Indians never fired a shot at him!

A second son, Peter, was born while the family lived in Bluff. William worked on a ranch in Montezuma Canyon. By December of 1882 the family was again living in Parowan. Seven additional children were born there. Of the nine, seven survived to adulthood.

In Parowan, William Gurr was a partner with other citizens in organizing the People’s store in the 1890’s. He was the manager and opened the store in one of the rooms of his housel Even though others lost interest, he continued to run the store mostly on his own for a number of years. He died 1 August 1933, at Parowan, Iron County, Utah. Anna died two years later. Both are buried in Parowan Cemetery.

http://www.hirf.org/GurrWilliamHeber.html 
Gurr, William Heber (I2)
 
11554 Brief History of William John Gurr



Born: 27 Dec 1878 in Parowan, Iron County, Utah
Parents: William Heber Gurr and Anna Hansen
Married: Albena Hyatt, 8 June 1910 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah
Died: 10 October 1955, Parowan, Iron County, Utah



WILLIAM JOHN GURR -- A LIFE HISTORY
William John Gurr was born on Dec. 27, 1878 in Parowan, Iron County, Utah. He was the oldest of 10 children born to William Heber Gurr and Anna Hansen. Four of these siblings died young, including a set of triplet sisters who only lived a few days. His surviving siblings were Peter Hansen Gurr, Annie Ethel Gurr Jensen, James Edwin Gurr, and Luella Gurr Lowder. William was not a tall man, standing about 5’6”. He had brown hair and blue eyes.

Early Years
William’s parents were pioneers in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. His father and family joined the Church in Australia and sailed to California on the ship Lucas, crossing the wilderness of Nevada to settle in Utah. His mother’s parents, Jorgen Hansen and Anna Pedersen joined the church in Denmark and were asked to settle the wilderness of Parowan. Only two of their nine children survived the harsh conditions and grew to adulthood.

When William was two-years-old, he traveled with his parents and a company of Latter-day Saints through the “Hole-in-the-Rock” to help colonize Bluff, San Juan County, Utah. The party chiseled their way over slick rock hills and valleys. The trip took about six months and was filled with terrible hardships. The cattle had to be guarded each night and day as there was always the threat of Indians around who would stalk the camp in order to steal them. Once, the Indians drove off a few heads of cattle belonging to the colony at Bluff. William’s father (William Gurr, Sr.) stripped off his clothes, swam across the San Juan River, and drove the cattle back. Because he was naked and so white, the Indians never fired a shot at him!

Schooling
William’s brother Peter was born while the family lived in Bluff. By December of 1882 the family was again living in Parowan where William grew up. He attended some school in Provo, up in Utah County. He later attended the Brigham Young Academy in Provo and then the University of Utah in Salt Lake City where he studied to be a teacher and met his wife, Albena Hyatt. When he was 24 years old, he was called to serve in the Colorado Mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1902. While in the mission home in SLC, he received his patriarchal blessing from Apostle Francis M Lyman while in the LDS Temple and later a missionary blessing from Apostle Hyrum M. Smith. A serious illness forced him to return home before his mission was completed.

Work and Family Life
William met Albena Hyatt in Salt Lake City while they were both attending the University of Utah studying to become teachers. They both were from Parowan but didn’t know each other well, as she was raised in the “bottoms” north east of town. William was 30 and Albena 27 when they married. They went with George Durham and Nellie Marsden to Salt Lake City to be married in the LDS temple.

Williams’ first teaching job was in 1910, the year he married, at Summit, Utah, a small town between Parowan and Cedar City. He rode a bicycle from Parowan to Summit every morning and back at night. Later he came back to Parowan to teach. He was also a schoolteacher in Preston, Idaho. (?) While living in Milford, he worked for Oil Company from 1913 to 1915, also working in a hardware business. He was deputy tax assessor from 1915 to 1955 under three different bosses – Maeser Dalley (4 years), Ralph Prescott (4 years), and Hillman Dalley (32 years). As a result, he was never able to spend New Year's at home, as he was out on the county line assessing the sheep and cowherds. He had to go out on horseback and would be gone about a week. He also assessed every house and business in Parowan, Paragonah, and Buckhorn. For a time William served as City Councilman.

Eventually, William went to farming and Albena to housekeeping and raising a family, and that was the end of their school teaching. They were able to run his father's farm on shares, and after he passed away they inherited what wasn't sold off. Here in Parowan on Holyoak Lane? they raised three boys and two girls. The children, Laverl (1911), Elvin (1913), Mina (1914), Errold (1918) and Afton (1922) were all born in Parowan.

William would occasionally give the children a nickel to buy candy at the Parowan Mercantile. It was across the street from the Post Office (The Gurr's were box # 161) and run by Arthur Joseph. They’d each get a small sack almost full of candy for that price. There was a little store above the Merc called “John Mitchell’s store.” Later, a Cheese Factory moved into that building, and a new structure was built for the Mercantile on Main Street. Afton worked there for $1 a day as a teenager. Mina remembers when William first started shipping milk to the Cheese Factory, and they would return the cans filled with whey. They made a little money; it was the very first money Albena ever got. One check was for $32 and the kids thought they were the richest folks in town. The kids also picked peas and sorted potatoes in the cold at night for $1 per night.

After the family settled in Parowan, William supported the family by farming and as assessor part of each year. He was a hard worker; always up by 4:30 to milk the cows and then in bed by 9:00. He would frequently milk the cows in the field because they didn't have feed at home. Or sometimes they'd take them down to the pasture toward the little salt lake just beyond Grandpa Hyatt's old farm.

The family was fed with meat and fruit, berries and vegetables from his wife, Albena’s, very large garden. He raised potatoes, oats, alfalfa, and peas. He would grow field corn on the dry land farm down the highway toward Paragonah. They called this area "down on the flats." He also grew corn out back of the corral and in the orchard. At first, the orchard was shared with his brother Pete who lived next door. They had a pond there for watering, which came from a spring up in dry canyon. They would take turns draining the pond on the garden, orchard and lawn. Eventually Pete bought most of the orchard.

Growing potatoes was hard work. With a sack full of seed potato sections, the kids would follow the plow and drop them 14" apart. Then after they were up, a one-horse cultivator was used to keep the weeds down and make furrows. After irrigating, they would cultivate several times during the season, with one person holding the cultivator and another riding the horse. They used a small potato digger behind the plow point, which shoved them up onto a grill at harvest time.

One year a man from California came and asked if he would raise broccoli for him, which he did. It was harvested in Parowan and shipped to California for processing. Afton remembers it being the first time she saw her dad eat other veggies besides potatoes & gravy, corn and sliced tomatoes with sugar sprinkled over the slices. William owned one of the few grain binders in the valley. He was kept busy cutting grain for others, and would receive grain in payment per acre cut. This kept him busy for several weeks.
Before harvest time he would pull the grinder up under the big shade tree out in front of the house and would work on it to see that it was in good shape. He could repair anything. When he cut the families grain, so it wouldn't dry, they rolled by hand the stems, bundles, and shocks and at the same time kept the heads of grain out of the swill. Then with the hay wagon it was hauled to town and stacked in one of the corrals. Then, the threshing machine would thresh it. In the early days, the steam engine would do it. This was usually stored in the granary, and later would be taken to the flourmill. They would grind flour, cereal, germade, and rolled oats.

A slaughterhouse was up beyond the orchard by the pond. It was built by Grandpa Gurr and the meat was sold in his store. This store handled all sorts of things. It included a bakery and furnished the bread for the sacrament at church.
At watering time down in the field they would stay at least two days or more to adequately water the crops. Until they purchased a car, they would take a grub box, a bedroll and tent down and live in it. They had to watch the water the entire time.
William was a hard worker. When they would load the hay, they would start early in the morning going down the lane to the farm, loading the hayrack wagon with hay, and hauling it back up the lane and to the barn at the east end of town. The wagon would be pulled close to the barn beneath a large, high opening. There hung a large fork with claws that would drop down on the hay, enclosing a big hunk of hay. It would then be pulled up and through his opening and dropped inside the barn. The girls remember riding the sweaty, old horse until someone yelled, “Stop,” when they’d yank the rope and the claw released the hay. They also used to ride on the wagon and tromp the hay.

Mina remembers an incident on the farm with a bull. It was a mean one. “The calf got in the bull pen. Dad gave me a pitchfork and told me to jab at him if he came near, to attract the bull’s attention while he got the calf out of the pen. I was only 14, and scared stiff. As Dad was getting the calf that bull started toward me! I threw the pitchfork down and ran like crazy for the fence. It was a high fence but I jumped and scaled it like it was nothing! I have never been so scared in my life! Dad had to run and get the pitch fork and get after the bull himself.”

Once the family went to Salt Lake City to get a bull calf in an old dodge that had been converted into a pickup. William removed the rumble seat and put in a lumber pickup bed. Albena made a bed in the back for the kids. It was February and very cold, as both of the windows were broken out. New ones were too expensive so they were replaced with cardboard. When they arrived in Salt Lake an angry policeman stopped them and grabbed the cardboard and pulled it out so William could see where he was going. As they were stopped at a light in one small town a pedestrian noticed their steering rod had lost a bolt and was flopping around. They were able to fix it without incident and went merrily on their way.

William was a worker who took pleasure in his very fine horses and harnesses. In addition to farming, in his younger years, he did a great deal of freighting with a four-horse team between Parowan and Milford – plus longer distances to St., George, Las Vegas and Caliente. He would hitch four horses together onto the wagon, two on the front of the wagon and two leading. He would then trail one wagon behind the other. He hauled many things, including lumber, brick, coal and salt from the little salt lake. He often told the story of a time when he was coming down Parowan Canyon. He had a big team of horses and they got away and what a time he had coming down that canyon. When he would freight out to Delmar, Nevada, which was out in the middle of nowhere, he would stay overnight with his wagon and team. He would dig in the snow to camp and feed the horses. It would take him two or three days to meet the train and then return home with the freight he’d picked up. He would haul for the mine there. He’d haul both ways, as the railroad track didn’t go to Delmar in those days. This left the family alone a lot. His son, Errold remembers traveling to Cedar City with his dad and loading the wagons with yellow brick that Edgar Benson built his house with. They slept in the train yard overnight.

William took great care of his horses, using everything at his disposal to keep them healthy through the winters. Occasionally he would go with John Evans up north to get barrels of sorghum (a by-product of sugar beets). He would dilute it with water and sprinkle it on straw. This made the straw more palatable so the animals would eat it.

William was involved in building the Yankee Meadow Dam reservoir with his team. He dumped the first load of dirt that went into that dam. After getting it started, William went to the 6-mile where the water had run around, as there was a lot of sand there. They used the sand to mix the concrete for the spillway. He and Ivan Orton, took several days filling burlap bags and hauling it back up. One day he climbed in a tree to fasten a cable and accidentally fell right on his head. They thought he was dead. Albena was almost hysterical.

Another accident occurred at the Gravel Trap above Parowan. William was in a wagon equipped with dump boards. (A series of 2 x 4's not nailed together.) They were not in place, but just stacked together. While William was on his hands and knees the boards slipped and tumbled down across his back. It's a wonder it didn't kill him. He just shook his head and went on with what he was doing, and didn't even utter one cuss word. He was a really tough little guy..

Albena and William were very loving and patient with their children. Though times were difficult they would fine quarters for the kids so they could go to dances. They would let them occasionally take the car. He kept gas in it all the time.

The family loved to spend time in the canyons; they would gather elderberries from which Albena would make delicious jelly. They also loved to gather pinenuts. Sometimes they would back the pickup under a tree and shake the pinenuts from the tree into the back of the pickup to speed things up. After a frost the pinecones would open up and let the pinenuts drop out. Or, they could put a blanket under the tree and shake the pinenuts into it. Other times they just had to pick them up one by one, which was mighty tedious - but they were surely good! William also used to enjoy deer hunting with his sons and son-in-law Ivan Orton. Each summer they would try to go to Cedar Breaks and the Mammoth for the 24th of July Celebration. They wold live under the wagon or anywhere they could - even in the rain. They enjoyed the fireworks and the dances at Minnie's Mansion.

William was a small man, shorter than his wife. He always wore overalls, except on Sundays. The first thing you would notice about him was his bright blue eyes. It seemed like he was smiling all the time. He loved to whistle and sing. Everyone thought he was a real sweet guy. He was quiet by nature, but liked to make jokes and tell stories. He was quite a happy, jovial fellow. He began losing his hair quite early in life. He had a fringe around the edge and one long swatch that he would comb over right on top from one side.

He was such an early bird going to bed for he would always be up at the crack of dawn. Getting up early was a habit of his and difficult to break. The house had two wood burning stoves, a “Home Comfort” cook stove in the kitchen, and a big pot bellied stove in the dining room which was in the center of the house. These stoves heated the entire house. He would stoke up these stoves so it would be nice and warm when the family got up. William was very loving with the children, Afton remembers him bouncing the grandkids on his knee and singing, “Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ra-loo-ra” to entertain them. He also always kept a horse just for the Grandkids to ride, and made the farm a fun place for them to visit. He was a sweet man and would always kiss his wife when he was going somewhere. Afton remembers that when she’d have to leave after a visit he would put his arms around her and cry to see her go. Albena didn’t like it, but he would occasionally wander down to the corral and smoke a cigar.

Church Service
William served as Second Counselor to President Alvin Benson in the Mutual organization and was set apart on the 1st of September 1900. He was later called to serve in the Colorado mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1903, at the age of 24. Before he left, he was given a bible from President Heber J. Grant that he had written in and signed. While in the mission home in Salt Lake, he received his patriarchal blessing from Apostle Francis M. Lyman in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. After about six months in Colorado, he became seriously ill with “quinsy” which is similar to a serious tonsillitis. This forced him to return home, and he felt very badly about that. Later he was able to go on a mission to Preston, Idaho. (OR DID HE TEACH THERE?) On March 31 1929, he was ordained a high priest in the LDS Church by Thomas J. Jones, and as such, served as First Counselor to Clayton Mitchell in the Bishopric of the Parowan Ward for a number of years.

Final Years
In 1949, William sold the family farm and retired. But, they kept the house until his untimely death in 1955 when Albena moved into Cedar City to be close to her daughter, Mina. Death came suddenly to William in the form of a heart attack while he was in his yard shucking corn on the 10th of October 1955. Albena called him to dinner, and he didn’t come so she went out and he had toppled over with a lap full of corn. He was shucking and then trimming, and he had a knife in one hand and an ear of corn in the other. She screamed and cried, and his bishop who was working nearby came to help. He is buried in the Parowan Cemetery next to his loving wife, Albena. He was honest and well liked by everyone he came in contact with. Many said he was the most honest man they’d ever known. He made many friends wherever he went. It was said of him that he never uttered an unkind word to anyone in his life!

(Compiled by Dawna Spear Booth from information obtained from Afton Gurr Booth, Errold Gurr, and Mina & Ivan Orton and genealogy records in their possession.)
Note: Article from Parowan Newspaper:
Not a molar in his head, and all of a sudden, he cuts two wisdom teeth. Well, not all of a sudden either. One came in a couple of years ago. Then just a few days ago the second pushed through the gums. No canines or incisors between, you understand, just those two wisdom teeth.
And the catch was – he couldn’t keep them. Had to have both pulled in fact. It happened to William J. Gurr of Parowan who happens to be a retired farmer and 77 years old. He’s been completely toothless since about 1946 when his own ivories were extracted. And while Mr. Gurr would like to grow a whole new set, two lone wisdom teeth aren’t much help. Just make his false set wobbly.

http://www.hirf.org/GurrWmJohn.html
 
Gurr, William John (I70)
 
11555 British Columbia, Canada, Death Index, 1872-1990

Name: Caral Litzgus
Gender: Female
Birth Year: abt 1895
Death Age: 22
Death Date: 16 Oct 1917
Death Location: Nelson
Registration Number: 1917-09-186606
BCA Number: B13109
GSU Number: 1927137
 
Leader, Coral (I47)
 
11556 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I1550)
 
11557 Bryan was a Seventy in the Priesthood, Sunday School Superintendent, Elders Quorum President, Y.M.I.A. President, Instructor in various Sunday School Classes. Hobbies include Dancing, Reading and Golf.

Bryan got his parents consent to enlist in Military Service in June 1916 for Mexican Border duty and he served with the A.E.F. in France until January 1919. He worked for Lockheed Aircraft Corp. for twenty three and a half years. He retired August 31, 1964.

"Bryan Heber Maughan." FamilySearch. Web. Accessed 20 Oct 2015. 
Maughan, Bryan Heber (I2701)
 
11558 Bsc, Agriculture, Ohio State University
 
Degree B.S. Agriculture, Ohio State University
Occuption: County Agent, Appraiser, Farm Management for
Union Central Life Insurance, farmer 
Hawk, Ellis Leroy Sr. (I4)
 
11559 Bsc, University Of Illinois, Msc 1909, Honorary Doctorates Coffey, Walter (I977)
 
11560 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I5941)
 
11561 Bunker Hill, York Town, Brandywine
 
Property 1500 acres in Irish Valley 
Campbell, William (I659)
 
11562 BUR: Rawson-Coffin Family Book, pg 149-copy of Pam Wagner.
From Hiatt Family Record of Iva Rawson Creamer. 
Hiatt (I4838)
 
11563 Burial information was found on: "Ohio, Deaths, 1908-1953," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XXS2-31F : accessed 22 May 2013), James M Raynor, 1938.

There is also a headstone picture and entry:
James M.A. Raynor (1863-1938)
Birth: Jun. 28, 1863
Death: Jun. 14, 1938
Burial: Pleasant View Cemetery
Petersburg, Monroe County, Michigan, USA

Created by: James Lemon
Record added: Sep 21, 2008
Find A Grave Memorial# 29965759  
Raynor, James M Ashley (I446)
 
11564 Burial notice found on Find a Grave. Hersey, Lewis Alvin (I14)
 
11565 Burial:
Murphree Cemetery
Evant, Hamilton County, Texas, USA
Plot: Row 16, Grave 19

Find A Grave Memorial# 65571457
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=65571457





 
Slaughter, Bessie Lee (I13)
 
11566 Burial:
Placerville Union Cemetery
Placerville, El Dorado County, California, USA
Plot: Section 5, Lot 19, Grave G
Find A Grave Memorial# 99698472
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=99698472






 
Bell, Lemual Franklin (I5)
 
11567 Burial:
Placerville Union Cemetery
Placerville, El Dorado County, California, USA
 
Find A Grave Memorial# 136141636
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=136141636&ref=acom






 
Smith, Leota Mae (I3)
 
11568 Burial:
Aultorest Memorial Park
Ogden
Weber County
Utah, USA
Plot: Masonic, 20, 1
Find A Grave Memorial# 63835474 
Pedersen / Petersen, Emery George John (I750)
 
11569 Burial:
Aultorest Memorial Park
Ogden
Weber County
Utah, USA
Plot: Masonic, 213, 3
Find A Grave Memorial# 63835613 
Pedersen, Johan (I176)
 
11570 Burial:
Aultorest Memorial Park
Ogden
Weber County
Utah, USA
Plot: Masonic, 213, 4
Find A Grave Memorial# 63835788 
Mortensen, Marie (I76)
 
11571 Burial:
Bachelder Cemetery
Fredonia
Wilson County
Kansas, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 59753067 
Fortner, Samuel (I96)
 
11572 Burial:
Benjamin Cemetery
Benjamin
Utah County
Utah, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 18483195 
Gurr, Enoch Eldredge (I12)
 
11573 Burial:
Calvary Cemetery
Omaha
Douglas County
Nebraska, USA
Plot: Station 06
Find A Grave Memorial# 152192211 
Reeder, Ambrose Thomas (I19)
 
11574 Burial:
Calvary Cemetery
Omaha
Douglas County
Nebraska, USA
Plot: Station 06, Row 12, Lot 18, Space 2
Find A Grave Memorial# 152192213 
Schultz, Magdelena Gertrude (I22)
 
11575 Burial:
Calvary Cemetery
Seattle
King County
Washington, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 5348839 
Clifford, Mary Ellen Margaret (I1)
 
11576 Burial:
Cherokee Cemetery
Cherokee
Crawford County
Kansas, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 30308912 
Castile / Castel, Albert (I14)
 
11577 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 107156674 
Allen, Elma (I614)
 
11578 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 48058137 
Allen, Gove Liahona (I592)
 
11579 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 48525062 
Crandall, Charles Lee (I632)
 
11580 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 48569490 
Crandall, Paul Leslie (I589)
 
11581 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 48569490 
Crandall, Don Ashael (I631)
 
11582 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 48989640 
Mary Magdeline (I621)
 
11583 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: 0795-3-1
Find A Grave Memorial# 57959391 
Allen, Hyrum Loren (I588)
 
11584 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: 105-3-1
Find A Grave Memorial# 54764899

 
Allen, Eldred Phelps (I594)
 
11585 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: 885, Lot 1
Find A Grave Memorial# 118129015 
Allen, Mary (I593)
 
11586 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 1042, Lot 4, Grave 8
Find A Grave Memorial# 62478867 
Brimhall, Rae Elbert (I485)
 
11587 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 1070, Lot 3, Grave 6
Find A Grave Memorial# 64346765 
Leavitt, Floyd Rogers (I489)
 
11588 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 1230, Lot 4, Grave 6C
Find A Grave Memorial# 64346763 
Wells, Donna Arlene (I473)
 
11589 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 70, Lot 3, Grave 7
Find A Grave Memorial# 64346767 
Leavitt, John Seymour (I459)
 
11590 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 805, Lot 4, Grave 1
Find A Grave Memorial# 62889194

 
Crandall, Wilford Myron (I630)
 
11591 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 885, Lot 1, Grave 1
Find A Grave Memorial# 65849480 
Hardison, Waldo Collins (I633)
 
11592 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 885, Lot 1, Grave 3
Find A Grave Memorial# 64346768 
Leavitt, Joseph Collins (I454)
 
11593 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 885, Lot 1, Grave 4
Find A Grave Memorial# 64346761 
Allen, Blanche (I455)
 
11594 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 885, Lot 1, Grave 7
Find A Grave Memorial# 82012275 
Palmer, Lois (I599)
 
11595 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 885, Lot 1, Grave 8
Find A Grave Memorial# 61806836 
Allen, Dr. Ben Rich (I596)
 
11596 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 914, Lot 4, Grave 5
Find A Grave Memorial# 84436972

 
Allen, Ben Rich Jr. (I610)
 
11597 Burial:
City of Mesa Cemetery
Mesa
Maricopa County
Arizona, USA
Plot: Section 997, Lot 3, Grave 8
Find A Grave Memorial# 64346668

 
Larson, Ivan Victor (I4380)
 
11598 Burial:
Daugherty Cemetery
Walesboro
Bartholomew County
Indiana, USA
Plot: Row 15, oldest section
Find A Grave Memorial# 104398044 
Lain, Giles (I51)
 
11599 Burial:
East Belmore Cemetery
Belmore, Putnam County, Ohio, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 100892593 
Speaker, George (I783)
 
11600 Burial:
East Belmore Cemetery
Belmore, Putnam County, Ohio, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 100892759 
Learn, Samantha (I784)
 

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